Extruding and pipe press

ABSTRACT

The invention relates to an extruding and pipe press comprising a press frame that consists of a cylindrical spar and of a counter spar, which are joined to one another in a non-positive manner by upper and lower pretensioned drawing lamellae as well as by upper and lower pressure supports. A mobile running spar and a mobile feeder, which transfers a block to be pressed, said block being introduced by a charging device, to a pressing position in front of the counter spar with the die, are mounted inside said press frame. The running spar and the feeder can be displaced inside the press frame by means of guide units that comprise roll bodies.

The invention relates to a rod- and tube-extrusion press having upper and lower prestressed laminated tension rods as well as upper and lower compression beams interconnecting a cylinder crosshead and a counter crosshead of a press frame and on which are mounted a movable crosshead and a movable container into which a loader places a billet to be pressed through a die on the counter crosshead.

Such a horizontal or recumbent metal-extrusion press is known from EP 0,428,989. A billet heated in a furnace to forging temperature is picked up by loading shells and swung by arms fixed on a shaft—this being a so-called pivotal loader as opposed to a standard linear billet loader—into alignment on the press axis in the space between the die and the pressing disk. An actuating cylinder shifts the movable crosshead and the billet container toward the die so as to fit the billet container over the billet. As the billet container is advanced, the axially movable pivotal arms slide on the shaft until the block is braced between the press piston and the counter crosshead or the die mounted thereon. The containers are displaced by lateral cylinders.

The above-described rod- and tube-extrusion press is well known and performs different types of extrusion, e.g. making tubing around a fixed mandrel for instance with aluminum or making small-diameter tubing. With direct and indirect tube extrusion the billet can be punched in the press (see for example “Aluminium 49”; [1973] 4, pages 296 to 299).

With extrusion the movable crosshead and the container are normally mounted on a separate frame or on the tie elements extending between the crossheads (pressure beams, laminated beams, or combinations of compressed tubes and tie bolts) by means of slide plates and slide bushings. The latter are normally formed of bronze or plastic so that these parts wear quite a bit. This has the inevitable result that the alignment of the press must be checked often and reset and the slide or guide units have to be changed. Since this wear directly affects the service life of the tools, the quality of the product, the amount of service required, the ease of service, and the general condition of the press, for example the wear of secondary actuators, pressure plates, and the like, the guide systems are of particular significance for the general operation of the press.

These disadvantages are mitigated somewhat by making the frame of the extrusion press particularly compact to efficiently resist the press forces. The maximum forces to be resisted by the frame combine with the forces bearing on the piston of the pressing cylinder, the lateral cylinders, and the container-shifting cylinders. The use of four prestressed tension rods and four compression beams joining the cylinder crosshead and the counter crosshead reduces the deformation by more than 50% relative to constructions of standard dimensions with no prestressing. Nonetheless there is always some elastic deformation of the press frame which has an effect on the accuracy of movement of the container and of the movable crosshead as well as their slides.

It is thus an object of the invention to provide a rod- and tube-extrusion press of this type without the cited disadvantages, in particular with improved operational characteristics even when greatly stressed.

This object is attained according to the invention in that the movable crosshead and the container are supported on guide units bearing with rollers on the pres frame. Since the guide system has neither sliding nor wearing parts, but instead has rollers (cylinders, barrels, balls, pins, etc) that do not wear, several objects are achieved. The extrusion press needs only be aligned once when warm to hold alignment on the press axis. The is guide units that can ride with their rolls on rails or rods or the like require no subsequent adjustment, the service life of the tools is increased, production quality is improved, downtime for service is less and simpler, and overall there is a substantially better mechanical operation of the rod- and tube-extrusion press.

Although it is true that the particular characteristics of roller and slide bearings as well as their different physical load-transmitting capacities are known, it is nonetheless always true that rod- and tube-extrusion presses always use slide bearings. As a result it must be concluded that rod- and tube-extrusion presses are considered inappropriate candidates for the use of roller bearings. This is the result of various mechanical realities, such as the actual width of the parts (container and movable crosshead), thermally induced dimension changes, the kinematics (speed, acceleration, cycling time, stroke), the elastic interrelationship inside the press frame .e.g. bending of the guide units, canting of the container caused by reaction forces against the actuators when moving toward the press center, and the longitudinal stretching of the compression beams. In addition there are also process-created influences, e.g. eccentric action of the pressing force as a result of irregular temperature distribution of the material being extruded or asymmetrical crushing of the billet, workpiece mushrooming, shocks, and the cleanliness of the surroundings in addition to other factors caused by construction or assembly problems, for example the position of the parts in the press frame when the guides are mounted and the levelness of the supporting surfaces on the compression beams. As a result of extensive systematic analyses of all the influencing factors it has however been determined that high-load rollers can be used in the guide units of the movable crosshead and container and allow use in a rod- and tube-extrusion press with the stated advantages.

According to a feature of the invention the rollers of the guide units ride on guide rails on the lower beams, the movable crosshead preferably being supported on two such guide units and the container on four such guide units, one or two on each of the parallel guide rails. The exact number of guide units is however always dependent on the actual requirements, for example the size of the extrusion press. The rollers can be set in an X- or O-array. The O-array as contrasted to the X-array produces greater stiffness but is more sensitive to fabrication or assembly tolerance errors.

According to a preferred embodiment of the invention the movable crosshead and the container sit via free supports on the guide units. In contrast to a differently coupled system where the movable crosshead and the container are fixed to their guide units such that they cannot move in any of the three axes (one or all three) on their guide units, this is a decoupled system. The movable crosshead and the container can move in all three directions (x, y, and z) independently of the guide units.

According to an advantageous embodiment of the invention the free supports each have a pressure plate on the respective guide unit and supporting a ball part in turn bearing via a slide plate on the respective crosshead or container. The ball part fitting in a complementary seat prevents an offset created for example by manufacturing or assembly tolerance errors while the pressure plate distributes forces on the guide units and the slide plate compensates out the axial movements of the support faces.

When according to the invention a spacer is provided between each slide plate and the cross beam or container, it is simple to adjust the height of the container or movable crosshead relative to the press axis. The spacer can for example be one or more shims or adjustment screws.

According to a proposal of the invention the free supports of the guide units are biased by springs, preferably under prestress. As a result of the spring force of, for example, a spring pack, in particular a prestressed spring pack, the container and the movable crosshead are urged pack into position when pushed out of the center of the press. The amount of prestressing force can be adjusted to shift the container or movable crosshead so that these parts are returned to position by the spring even when shifted a little. The advantageous of a prestressed rather than an unprestressed system with the same spring constants is that even with small deflections there is a high spring return force available.

Further particular features of the invention are given in the claims and the following description of embodiments of the invention shown in the drawing. Therein:

FIG. 1 is a perspective view of the frame, without the fixed crosshead, of a rod- and tube-extrusion press with a movable crosshead and a container;

FIG. 2 is the press frame according to FIG. 1, partly in section and partly seen from the left in FIG. 1;

FIG. 3 is a detail of the roller support of a guide unit on a guide rail of the press frame according to FIG. 1;

FIG. 4 is a detail of two guide units with different roller-support assemblies; and

FIG. 5 is a schematic illustration of the individual strokes of the movable crosshead and container.

The compact press frame 1 of a well known horizontal extrusion press is shown in FIG. 1. It comprises in this embodiment a cylinder crosshead 2 that is connected by four laminated tension rods 3 with an unillustrated counter crosshead provided on the left ends of the rods 3 as seen in FIG. 1. Further compression beams 4 are provided connected these parts and surround the tension rods 3 between the cylinder crosshead 2 and the counter crosshead. In addition to transmitting force, the compression beams 4 also act as guides for a movable crosshead 5 and a movable container 6 in the frame 1.

FIG. 5 shows the individual strokes 7 and 8 of the crosshead 5 and container 6, shown in dashed lines in their outer end positions relative to a counter crosshead shown at 9, through which strokes the crosshead 5 and container 6 are displaced by their respective drive cylinders 10 and 11. This schematic illustration clearly shows that the strokes 7 and 8 increase with increasing press size. Both the crosshead 5 and the container 6 ride via rollers 12 or 13 a, 13 b (see FIGS. 3 and 4) on guide rails 14 each carried on a respective one of the two lower beams 4 of the press frame 1 (see FIG. 1).

The rollers 12, 13 a, and 13 b are set in either an O-array (see the rollers 13 a in FIG. 4) or in an X-array (see the rollers 13 b in the right-hand part of FIG. 4) in a guide unit 15 formed as a carriage. The movable crosshead 5 is supported on the rails 14 on each side with one such guide unit 15 and the container 6 on each side with two such guide units 15 interconnected by a bridge 16. The movable crosshead 5 and the container 6 sit as shown in FIG. 2 via free supports 17 on the guide units 15, that is they are not fixed to them. The free supports 17 are each formed by a ball part 18 that fits in a complementary seat 20 supported by a slide plate 19 on the crosshead 5 (or container 6). Between the guide units 15 and the respective ball parts 18 there is also a pressure plate 21 and above the slide plate 19 there can be shims 22 by means of which it is possible to align the crosshead 5 or the container 6 with the press axis.

In order to mitigate problems with the roller guide system that affect its service life further improvements can be made to reduce the friction between the ball parts 18 and the slide plates 19, for example by using slide plates 19 with a low coefficient of friction or supplying a lubricant, conforming the size of the slide plates 19 to the weights of the parts, reducing the effective lever action or increasing the static strength of the guide units 15 by reducing the distance between the upper side of the guide rails 14 and the inner undersides of the guide units 15 by interposition of a plate of thickness h as shown in FIG. 3.

As a result of the use of the slide plates 19 between the ball parts 18 and the crosshead 5 or the container 6 relative axial movement of the beam 4 carrying the guide rail 14 to the crosshead or container 6 can be tolerated. This movement can be the result of thermal deformation of the machine parts, of the elastic deformation of the press frame 1 as a result for example of axial forces applied to the container 6 from contact of the pressing disk in the container passage when not perfectly aligned. In order to reset the movable crosshead 5 and the container 6 back into the press center, the free supports 17 of the guide units are acted upon by spring packs 24 that can be imparted any desired spring constant by adjustment nuts 25. 

1. A rod- and tube-extrusion press having upper and lower prestressed laminated tension rods as well as upper and lower compression beams interconnecting a cylinder crosshead and a counter crosshead of a press frame and on which are mounted a movable crosshead and a movable container into which a loader places a billet to be pressed through a die on the counter crosshead, characterized in that the movable crosshead (5) and the container (6) are supported on guide units (15) bearing with rollers (12) on the pres frame (1).
 2. The rod- and tube-extrusion press according to claim 1, characterized in that the rollers (12) of the guide units (15) ride on guide rails (14) on the lower beams (4).
 3. The rod- and tube-extrusion press according to claim 1 or 2, characterized in that the movable crosshead (5) is supported on two such guide units (15) and the container (6) on four such guide units (15).
 4. The rod- and tube-extrusion press according to one of claims to 3, characterized in that the movable crosshead (5) and the container (6) sit via free supports (17) on the guide units (15).
 5. The rod- and tube-extrusion press according to claim 4, characterized in that the free supports (17) each have a pressure plate (21) on the respective guide unit (15) and supporting a ball part (18) in turn bearing via a slide plate (19) on the respective crosshead (5) or container (6).
 6. The rod- and tube-extrusion press according to claim 5, characterized in that a spacer (22) is provided between each slide plate (19) and the cross beam (5) or container (6).
 7. The rod- and tube-extrusion press according to claims 1 to 6, characterized in that the free supports (17) of the guide units (15) are biased by springs (24).
 8. The rod- and tube-extrusion press according to claim 7, characterized in that the springs (24) are prestressed. 